Disappointed w/ Klipsch Heresy III. Now what?


I'd be very grateful for some help with a quandary.

I recently replaced my Ohm Walsh 1000 speakers with Heresy III speakers, running two-channel from a Rega Brio. I was pretty excited about the Heresy IIIs based on reviews — they were efficient, so my 35-watt amp would get the job done; they were supposed to have real punch in the low mid-range, so I could hear the upright bass clearly; they reportedly had excellent imaging; and best of all, they were supposed to sound great at low volumes. They are also indisputably beautiful, which was an important factor for my wife. (The Ohms are elegant, but you have to be an audio lover to see their beauty.)

I set them up, and . . . not so bad, pretty good. Especially loud. In fact the louder the better. Crank them up and they sing. But loud is not really an option with a new baby. So how do they sound quiet? They sound like the band is trapped in shoe box. Really in two shoe boxes because the L and R don't merge that well. The sound stage is tiny. All the detail is gone, the joy is gone. They are no fun at all. Music just seems like a bunch of noise.

But I want to believe! I want to make these speakers work. So I am faced with a quandary. I could:

1. Buy stands, a subwoofer and a tube amp, all of which people in various forums have recommended to improve the various failings I hear now.

2. Replace the Rega with something much more powerful and pull the Ohms out of the closet. (Suboptimal because it will make my wife sad because of the aforementioned perceived ugliness.)

3. Just start all over again. Different amp, different speakers.

I'd kind of prefer number 1. But I don't want to end up with a bunch of stuff designed to solve a problem and then not have that problem solved! (And I'd also just as soon avoid getting a subwoofer.)

Final note. Positioning is an intractable nightmare. It is the one thing that I can't really change, because of how our living room is layed out. It is obviously a big problem though. The living room is a big rectangle, 18 x 40 feet, and the speakers are near the corners of the 18-foot ends, on either side of a couch. I can move them around — closer or further from the couch, closer or further from the wall. But I can't raise them above the height of the couch or move them out in front or over to another wall. That discussion went nowhere!

What should I do?

 



brooklynluke
Horn speakers do not need tube amplification to sound great.  Both the Avantgarde and the Klipsch sound just as good with solid state as they do with tubes. 
I think any great speaker (including the Heresy III), especially efficient ones, respond to the "first watt" principle where the quality of the amp is immediately apparent. I happen to like tube stuff, but there are countless well designed and voiced SS amps that are great sounding. Note that horns like the Heresy III versions utilize modern and relatively common titanium drivers in both the tweeter and mid horn, and they're simply rendered more efficient by horn loading. Nothing exotic or even "special" going on there.
There are way too many things that go into matching amplification and transducers.  There is no right or wrong amp to use with anything. It's 100% personal preference.  What too many folks don't take into account is that not all tube amps 'sound' like tube amps.  Tubes are tons faster than the faster SS devices.  Audio Research amps don't sound anything like tubes of yesterday.  They are very very fast and tonally outstanding.  CJ, AR sound very very different now days.  Both are tubes (mostly).  I have owned Jadis, Aesthetix, CJ, AR, Quicksilver, Rogue, Counterpoint and many others over my lifetime.  I have also owned Krell, Ayre, Levinson and a ton of others.  They all have their own sound signature and they all play better in the sandbox with certain speakers.  


Dick Olsher, in the Absolute Sound, gave them a nice review back in November of 2012. Another nice review was written by Jeff Dorgay in Tone.......